• J Emerg Nurs · Sep 2012

    Comparative Study

    Mild traumatic brain injury: are ED providers identifying which patients are at risk?

    • Barbara Stuart, Barbara Mandleco, Russell Wilshaw, Renea L Beckstrand, and Sondra Heaston.
    • Emergency Department, Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, Provo, UT, USA.
    • J Emerg Nurs. 2012 Sep 1;38(5):435-42.

    ObjectiveTo identify patients with specific ED discharge diagnoses reporting symptoms associated with a mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI), compare frequency/severity of MTBI symptoms by discharge diagnosis, investigate head injury education provided at ED discharge, and learn about changes made by MTBI patients after injury.MethodsThe Post Concussion Symptom Scale, a demographic questionnaire, and open-ended questions about the impact the injury had on patients' lives were completed by 52 ED patients, at least 2 weeks after injury, discharged with concussion/closed head injury, head laceration, motor vehicle crash (MVC), or whiplash/cervical strain diagnoses.ResultsBetween 1 and 23 MTBI symptoms were reported by 84.6% of the participants. Headache and fatigue were the most common; female patients had almost twice as many symptoms on average as male patients. Of MVC patients, 83.3% reported moderate severity scores for all 4 Post Concussion Symptom Scale categories, and these represented the highest overall severity scores. Concussion/closed head injury diagnosis patients received the most head injury education. The majority of patients were more cautious after injury.ConclusionMost participants reported having MTBI symptoms. Although MVC participants reported the most severe MTBI symptoms, they had the least head injury education. Emergency nurses need to be aware patients may have an MTBI regardless of their presenting symptoms or injury severity.Copyright © 2012 Emergency Nurses Association. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.

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